de Paul (1884); Marie (1885).—Bellier, i. 319.
CREATION, Michelangelo. See Adam;
Eve; Sun and Moon; Trees and Plants.
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CREDI, LORENZO DI, born in Florence
in 1459, died there,
Jan. 12, 1537.
Florentine school;
son of Andrea di
Credi, goldsmith;
pupil and assistant
of Verrocchio
at same time with
Leonardo da Vinci
and Perugino.
Under Verrocchio's
care he long laboured in copying either
his master's or Leonardo's sketches, with such
accuracy that Vasari says it was difficult to
distinguish his work from the originals.
Lorenzo followed Leonardo, and was but
slightly affected by Perugino. His works
are all easel pictures, remarkable for careful
execution and minute finish. His favourite
subject was the Holy Family. The best
and oldest of his altarpieces is the Madonna
and St. John the Baptist in the Duomo of Pistoja,
which is strongly reminiscent of Leonardo.
His Madonna, Mentz Museum, is
almost equally successful, as is the Holy
Family, Palazzo Borghese, Rome. The Madonna
with Saints, Louvre; Baptism of
Christ, Uffizi, Florence; Nativity, Florence
Academy; and Madonna and Virgin adoring
Infant Christ, National Gallery, London,
are also among
the best examples
of his
work.—C. & C.,
Italy, iii. 403; Vasari, ed. Mil., iv. 563, 575;
Burckhardt, 581, 622, 855; Ch. Blanc, École
florentine; Lübke, Gesch. ital. Mal., i. 368;
ii. 37.
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CREMONINI, GIOVANNI BATTISTA, born at Cento (?), died in Bologna in 1610. Bolgnese school. Chiefly a decorative painter. Painted some good historical subjects, but is noted for his pictures of animals, real and imaginary. His Christ on the way to Calvary and Christ meeting St. Veronica, a single picture dated 1598, is in the Bologna Gallery. Other examples in churches of Bologna, as, e.g., fresco,—the Annunciation, ceiling of Sacristy in S. Martino Maggiore, and Coronation of the Madonna, lunette, staircase, S. Maria del Bosco.—Malvasia, i. 225; Lanzi, iii. 53; Ch. Blanc, École bolonaise; Gualandi, 50, 126.
CRESCENZIO, ANTONIO, of Palermo,
15th century. Neapolitan school. No records
of him. His fresco, Triumph of Death,
in the court of the hospital at Palermo, is a
fanciful production which may have been
suggested by that of the Campo Santo,
Pisa. The figures are thrown together without
much regard for appropriate distribution,
but are drawn with great minuteness
of outline. It recalls the Sanseverini, to
whom, however, Crescenzio was superior.—C.
& C., N. Italy, ii. 110.
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CRESPI, DANIELE, born in Milan in
1590, died there
in 1630. Lombardo-Milanese
school; son and
pupil of Gio.
Battista Crespi
(Il Cerano); later
studied under
Giulio Cesare
Procaccini;
practised the
maxims of the school of the Carracci and
became famous, but was cut off, with all his
family, by the plague. Several of his pictures,
March to Calvary, Last Supper, Holy
Family, Baptism of Christ, are in the Brera;
others in churches in Milan, and in the Certosa
of Pavia.—Lanzi, ii. 520; Ch. Blanc,
École milanaise; Burckhardt, 765; Lavice,
Revue des Musées d'Italie (Paris, 1862).
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CRESPI, GIOVANNI BATTISTA, called